United Nations Office at Geneva

The United Nations Office at Geneva (UNOG) is the second-largest of the four major office sites of the United Nations (second to the United Nations Headquarters in New York). It is located in the Palais des Nations building constructed for the League of Nations between 1929 and 1938 at Geneva in Switzerland, and expanded in the early 1950s and late 1960s.

Besides United Nations administration, it also hosts the offices for a number of programmes and funds such as the United Nations Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD), the Office for the Coordination of Humanitarion Affairs (OCHA) and the Economic Commission for Europe (ECE).

The United Nations and its specialized agencies, programmes and funds may have other offices or functions hosted outside the Palais des Nations, normally in office spaces provided by the Swiss Government.

Contents

Constituent agencies

Headquartered at Geneva:

Presence at Geneva:

Directors-General of UNOG

  1. Wladimir Moderow, Poland 1946–1951
  2. J. Franclin Ray, USA 1952
  3. Sir Arthur Rucker, UK 1953
  4. Adriannus Pelt, Netherlands 1954–1957
  5. Pier Pasquale Spinelli, Italy 1957–1968
  6. Vittorio Winspeare-Guicciardi, Italy 1968–1978
  7. Luigi Cottafavi, Italy 1978–1983
  8. Erik Suy, Belgium 1983–1987
  9. Jan Martenson, Sweden 1987–1992
  10. Antoine Blanca, France 1992–1993
  11. Vladimir Petrovsky, Russia 1993–2002
  12. Sergei Ordzhonikidze, Russia 2002–2011
  13. Kassym-Jomart Tokayev, Kazakhstan, 2011-present

Administrative History of the United Nations Office at Geneva

  1. United Nations Geneva Office, from beginning, Aug 1946 – Apr 1947, (IC/Geneva/1) [1]
  2. European Office of the UN, 11.04.1947 – 10.08.1948, (IC/Geneva/49) [2]
  3. United Nations Office at Geneva, 10.08.1948 – 09.08.1949, (IC/Geneva/152)
  4. European Office of the UN, 09.08.1949 – 08.12.1957, (SGB/82/Rev.1)
  5. United Nations Office at Geneva, 08.12.1957 – present, (SGB/82/Rev.2)

See also

References

  1. ^ UNOG Archives (1946). G II A −10/2/6 -1435. UNOG. 
  2. ^ UNOG Archives (1947). G II A −10/2/6 -1435. UNOG. 

External links